General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCato Institute-Do the Feds Still Merit the Court's Presumption of Regularity?
Normally, the DOJ and attorneys for the United States are given the presumption of regularity which means that the court may rely on and accept statements of fact made by such attorney as true. This was before trump and company fired many of the career attorneys at the DOJ and replaced these attorneys with hacks like Halligan, Ed Martin and their ilk.
The Cato Institute is NOT a liberal organization.
Link to tweet
https://www.cato.org/blog/should-feds-today-benefit-presumption-regularity-court
First, however, a few paragraphs on the ruling generally. To begin with, it conspicuously breaks the pattern by which the Court keeps granting the Trump administration stays of lower court rulings that restrain the administrations ambitious assertions of presidential powers, thus allowing the power assertions to continue pending later court action. The split was 63 with a few wrinkles (Justice Brett Kavanaugh joined the majority but would have decided the case more narrowly. Justice Neil Gorsuch did not join the strongly written dissent by Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas and instead dissented more narrowly.)
The majoritys logic appears to carry over to some of Trumps other deployments of the National Guard, and a week later, the administration announced that it was ending Guard deployments in Los Angeles and Portland, which had come under similar rebuffs at the lower court level. The terse majority opinion places much weight on an issue few initially saw as critical: how to interpret the use of the term regular forces in language empowering the president to federalize the Guard if he is unable with the regular forces to execute federal law. It also speaks the language of dry textualism rather than philosophical vision; Adam Unikowsky writes to explain why he sees that as a good thing.
Jack Goldsmith has offered a plausible analysis of some of the other issues in the case. Briefly: Trump retains many options not addressed by the Court; the statutory interpretation issues that the Court kicked down the road are quite complex; and the Court has not tipped its hand as to where it will come down on the inherent protective power theory cited by Trump and his backers as an argument for not needing any statutory basis at all for at least some of his troop deployments......
What is the presumption of regularity? An important multiauthored article at Just Security explains that it
is a judicially created doctrine with a long and contested history. The doctrine affords the executive branch a distinctive advantage not enjoyed by private litigants. It generally instructs courts to presume, unless there is clear evidence to the contrary, that executive officials have properly discharged their official duties and that government agencies have acted with procedural regularity and with bona fide, non-pretextual reasons.
For reasons both procedural and substantive, this convenient presumption helps the government prevail over many legal challenges and escape scrutiny entirely on others. Perhaps (or perhaps not) at some point in the past, the conduct of Americas executive branch was so upright and beyond reproach as to make judges feel comfortable in presuming good motivation and lawfulness. But this past year? The Just Security survey compiles dozens of instances over the past year in which the executives representations to courts or actions in connection with them have been in bad faith, motivated by retaliation, arbitrary or capricious, in defiance of court orders or established law, oragain and againbaldly untruthful. Others have compiled shorter lists, sometimes based on the governments misconduct before individual judges such as James Boasburg (D.D.C.) and Paula Xinis (D. Md.); I assembled a few in my piece on contempt of court way back in May 2025.
LetMyPeopleVote
(177,544 posts)A new ruling on the Alien Enemies Act provides a snapshot of the presumption of regularity that previous administrations have enjoyed.
Link to tweet
https://www.msnbc.com/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/trump-justice-department-lost-benefit-doubt-judges-rcna228763
The latest defeat came late Tuesday from a divided panel of judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit. The topic was the Alien Enemies Act, the 18th-century law that President Donald Trump invoked to deport alleged Venezuelan gang members. The panel majority granted a preliminary injunction against the administrations use of the law for deportations in Northern Texas......
In granting the injunction Tuesday, the 5th Circuit majority had to analyze the likelihood that the plaintiffs would suffer irreparable harm without preliminary legal relief. Siding with the plaintiffs, the majority cited (among other things) previous litigation at the Supreme Court where the justices sided with plaintiffs despite the governments assurances. The two judges in the majority on the 5th Circuit panel were George W. Bush appointee Leslie Southwick and Joe Biden appointee Irma Ramirez.
In a lengthy dissent, Trump appointee Andrew Oldham was bothered by (among other things) the majority refusing to give greater deference to the government. More dramatically, Oldham accused the majority of suggesting that DOJ lawyers are lying. If they are, I suppose they should be sanctioned. But it is astounding to say that lawyers from the United States Department of Justice are lying, wrote the judge, whos a contender for any Supreme Court vacancy that emerges under Trump......
Oldhams complaint calls to mind Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jacksons recent complaint that her colleagues invariably find a way to side with the administration, lamenting that the high court is playing a version of Calvinball in which this Administration always wins.
If this latest Alien Enemies Act litigation makes it to the justices, it can provide the latest test of whether Oldhams or Jacksons views are vindicated.
This is a decision from the 5th Circuit which surprised me. If the trump administration loses the presumption of regularity, then you will see more decisions like this
LetMyPeopleVote
(177,544 posts)Here is a long and detailed analysis of the concept of the Presumption of Regularity that law nerds will like
Link to tweet
https://www.justsecurity.org/120547/presumption-regularity-trump-administration-litigation/#post-122613-_Toc211417820
Over the decades, the scope and weight of the presumption has fluctuated. In the face of extraordinary executive misconduct or malfeasance, courts may choose (explicitly or implicitly) to narrow its scope, reduce its weight, or even potentially deem the presumption more generally forfeited, as the Trump administration is beginning to learn. Indeed, Judge Paul L. Friedman cautioned in an August 2025 opinion:
Generations of presidential administrations and public officials have validated this underlying premise of the presumption of regularity: their actions writ large have raised little question that they act in obedience to [their] duty. Over the last six months, however, courts have seen instance after instance of departures from this tradition. In just six months, the President of the United States may have forfeited the right to such a presumption of regularity. (emphasis added).
....In sum, the presumption of regularity credits to the executive branch certain facts about what happened and why and, in doing so, narrows judicial scrutiny and widens executive discretion over decisionmaking processes and outcomes, as an influential Harvard Law Review Note explained. But the maintenance of the presumption rests on certain foundations, and those foundations have been eroded by the Trump administration, especially the Justice Department, in the following three ways.
LetMyPeopleVote
(177,544 posts)Solly Mack
(96,737 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(177,544 posts)A motion from Don Lemon and Georgia Fort in Minnesota is the latest legal action questioning the presumption of regularity historically granted to the government.
Trump DOJ goes into its Don Lemon case without a key tool: The courtsâ trust - MS NOW
— (@oc88.bsky.social) 2026-02-17T21:45:47.083Z
apple.news/AuiMKRZdLS_C...
https://www.ms.now/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/don-lemon-georgia-fort-charges-minnesota-doj-trump
The extraordinary set of events that led to this indictment reveals a significant risk that the government misstated key facts or elements of the offenses charged during its presentation to the grand jury, as it has already done so publicly, calling into question the validity of the indictment, the motion argued. It said Lemon and Fort were indicted after attending a church protest solely in their capacities as members of the press and that they were charged only after courts rejected warrants for their arrest, Trump pressured the Justice Department and career prosecutors refused to be involved.
Maintaining that their concerns about government misconduct arent abstract or speculative, the defendants pointed to what they called a small but growing body of caselaw involving the precise situation we see here the government engaging in highly unusual conduct simultaneous to political pressure to bring charges, and misstatements of law at the highest levels of government.....
More broadly, they argued that the administration isnt entitled to the presumption of regularity, a legal concept that assumes government officials act properly. Its worth questioning the presumption as a general matter but especially in this administration, whose atypical actions have drawn atypical scrutiny from judges, including in other recent cases in Minnesota.
In light of the foregoing, the grand jury process in question here is not entitled to any presumption of regularity by the Court. Likewise, it should not be afforded the traditional secrecy that accompanies grand juries operating in the normal course, Lemon and Fort argued in their motion, filed Friday.
They were charged with conspiring against the right of religious freedom at a place of worship and with injuring, intimidating and interfering with the exercise of the right of religious freedom at a place of worship. They have pleaded not guilty.
The DOJ will have an opportunity to respond to the motion. But due to the Trump governments behavior over the past year, it may be going into this case with a disadvantage or, perhaps more precisely, without the advantage it would have in normal times. Although if we were in normal times, this case might not exist.